XXIII. 'Over the waters but a single bough' Poem by Robert Silliman Hillyer

XXIII. 'Over the waters but a single bough'



Over the waters but a single bough
Stretches in silhouette against the moon,
The little dark waves haunt the dim lagoon
And splash against the languid-moving prow.
I should have left thee when the afternoon
Surrendered to pursuing night, for now
Too perilously dear and fair art thou,
And love too soon invoked shall die too soon.

I fear the very floods of happiness
That swell the narrow chambers of my heart,
Knowing indeed that with our first caress,
Contentment and my soul forever part;
O night of love and beauty, all the years
Shall pay for thy brief ecstasy with tears.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Robert Silliman Hillyer

Robert Silliman Hillyer

East Orange, New Jersey
Close
Error Success